Connecting points in an arbitrary order

Connecting the points in an arbitrary order, however, is not supported by default. I couldn’t find a Highcharts plugin which supports this either, so I implemented a solution by modifying the getGraphPath function of the series object:

Usually small JavaScript projects start with simple wiring of callbacks onto DOM elements. This works fine when it the project is in its initial state. But in a short time it gets out of hand. Now we have spaghetti wiring and callback hell. Often at this point we try to get help by looking at adopting a framework, hoping to that its coded best practices draw us out of the mud. But now our project is tied to the new framework.
In search of another, framework independent way I stumbled upon scalable architecture by Nicholas Zakas.
It starts by defining modules as independent units. This means:

separate JavaScript and DOM elements from the rest of the application

Modules must not reference other modules

Modules may not register callbacks or even reference DOM elements outside their DOM tree

To communicate with the outside world, modules can only call the sandbox

Besides being an event bus, the sandbox is responsible for access control and provides the modules with a consistent interface.
Modules are started and stopped (in case of misbehaving) in the application core. You could also use the core as an anti corruption layer for third party libraries.
This architecture gives a frame for implementation. But implementing it raises other questions:

how do the modules update their state?

where do we call the backend?

Handling state

A global model would reside or be referenced by the application core. In addition every module has its own model. Updates are always done in application event handlers, not directly in the DOM event handlers.
Let me illustrate. Say we have a module with keeps track of selected entries:

Other modules can now listen on selecting entries. The module itself does not need to know who selected the entry. All the internal communication of selection is visible. This makes it possible to use event sourcing.

Calling the backend

No module should directly call the backend. For this a special module called extension is used. Extensions encapsulate cross cutting concerns and shield communication with other systems.

Summary

This architecture keeps UI parts together with their corresponding code, flattens callbacks and centralizes the communication with the help of application events and encapsulates outside communication. On top of that it is simple and small.

ECMAScript is the standardized specification of the scripting language that is the basis for JavaScript implementations in web browsers.

ECMAScript 5, which was released in 2009, is in widespread use today. Six years later in 2015 ECMAScript 6 was released, which introduced a lot of new features, especially additions to the syntax.

However, browser support for ES 6 needed some time to catch up.
If you look at the compatibility table for ES 6 support in modern browsers you can see that the current versions of the main browsers now support ES 6. This means that soon you will be able to write ES 6 code without the necessity of a ES6-to-ES5 cross-compiler like Babel.

The two features of ES 6 that will change the way JavaScript code will be written are in my opinion: the new class syntax and the new lambda syntax with lexical scope for ‘this’.

Class syntax

Up to now, if you wanted to define a new type with a constructor and methods on it, you would write something like this:

These arrow functions do not only preserve the binding of this but are also shorter. Especially if the function body consists of only a single expression. In this case the curly braces and and the return keyword can be omitted:

Wide-spread support for ECMAScript 6 is just around the corner, it’s time to familiarize yourself with it if you haven’t done so yet. A nice overview of the new features can be found at es6-features.org.

Last sunday, we held another Schneide Dev Brunch, a regular brunch on the second sunday of every other (even) month, only that all attendees want to talk about software development and various other topics. In case you miss the recap article about the february brunch: It didn’t happen. We all took a break, but are on track again. So if you bring a software-related topic along with your food, everyone has something to share. We were quite a lot of developers this time, so we had enough stuff to talk about. As usual, a lot of topics and chatter were exchanged. This recapitulation tries to highlight the main topics of the brunch, but cannot reiterate everything that was spoken. If you were there, you probably find this list inconclusive:

Why software development conferences?

We began with a curious question: Why are there even conferences about software development? You can read most of the content for free on the internet and even watch the talks afterwards. So why attend one for a lot of money? We discussed the topic a bit and came up with an analysis:
There are (at least) four different interested groups in a conference:

The organizer or commercial host is mostly interested in a positive revenue. As long as there’s a possibility for some net gain, somebody will host a conference. The actual topic is a secondary matter for them (this might explain some of the weirder conferences out there, like the boring conference).

The developers that really attend a conference are a small subset of all developers. They all have their own personal motives to pay money and invest time and inconviences to be there in person. Some might rely on the quality filter of a conference board, some are looking forward to meet their peers in an annual ritual. There might be those that can learn best if somebody talk-feeds them the topic. Whatever reason, a lot of developers enjoy participating at conferences. If it happens to be paid by the employer and booked as worktime, who would not?

Then there are the speakers. They have the additional burden to convince a committee of their topic, prepare a talk of high quality and be able to perform on stage (something that is harder than it looks). The speakers seek reputation and credible proof of expertise. His resume will probably profit, too.

And at last, the companies that sponsor the conference, maintain a booth with big roll-ups and smiling employees and give their developers a chance to attend are in the game to represent, to recruit and build their brand. A lot of traditional marketing effort goes into trade fairs, so why not treat the developer market like any other and be present in the developer fairs?

We can conclude that software development conferences can provide value for every associated stakeholder. As long as this sentence holds true, conferences will be held.
The question didn’t came out of the blue: one of our attendees got accepted as a speaker on the Karlsruher Entwicklertag 2016 and wanted to learn about the different expectations he needs to address. He will give his talk on the next Dev Brunch to practice the flow and to pass the hardest critics. The topic: git internals. We are thrilled!

Stratagems and strategies

The next topic contained another talk, not at a conference, but in the context of a “general topics” series at a local university (the Duale Hochschule in Karlsruhe). The talk introduces the concept of the 36 stratagems and of modern strategies to the audience. We talked a bit about the concept itself and found that the list of logical fallacies is somewhat similar. We even found an application of the stratagems in local history (sorry, only german source found): The Bretten’s Hundle
The talk itself is this monday, so you’ll need to hurry if you want to attend.

Games with morale aspects

Well, we are nerds. While crime investigation is thrilling, there is the even more enthralling topic of games with psychological and moralistic aspects. We soon exchanged our experiences with games like “Haze” or “Spec Ops: The Line”. But it doesn’t stop at shooter games, you can have similar insights by playing “Papers, Please” (a strong favorite for one of our next Schneide game nights) or “This War Of Mine”. You can even try some multiplayer games specifically designed for social insights, like “The Ship: Murder Party”.
And if you haven’t got much time but still want to learn something about yourself, little games like “60 Seconds!” are a great start.
This topic lead to some ideas for upcoming Schneide game nights in 2016.

Book review: A tour of C++

One attendee of the brunch provided a summary of the book “A Tour of C++” from Bjarne Stroustrup, that recently got updated to the language possibilities of C++ 11. In his words, the book is a rather incomplete introduction to the language, with way too many aspects described in a way too short manner. It’s more of a reading list to really grasp the concepts, so it may serve as a source of inspiration. For example, the notion of “move semantics” was explained, but to discover the consequences is up to the developer. The part about template programming was well done and every chapter has a suitable list of advices in the tradition of “Effective XYZ” at the end. So it’s not a bad book, but too short to be satisfying. It’s like a tourist’s tour around C++ 11, so the title holds its promise.

The left-pad incident

When we finished the “official” agenda, the topic of the recent left-pad incident came up and left us laughing. We really live in glorious times when the happiness of the (Javascript) world depends on a few lines of code. Not that this couldn’t happen in any other ecosystem.

Epilogue

As usual, the Dev Brunch contained a lot more chatter and talk than listed here. The number of attendees makes for an unique experience every time. We are looking forward to the next Dev Brunch at the Softwareschneiderei. And as always, we are open for guests and future regulars. Just drop us a notice and we’ll invite you over next time.

Most JavaScript developers are familiar with these basic functions of the console object: console.log(), .info(), .warn() and .error(). These functions dump a string or an object to the JavaScript console.

However, the console object has a lot more to offer. I’ll demonstrate a selection of the additional functionality, which is less known, but can be useful for development and debugging.

Tabular data

Arrays with tabular structure can be displayed with the console.table() function:

Conclusion

The console object does not only provide basic log output functionality, but also some lesser-known, yet useful debugging helper functions. The Console API reference describes the full feature set of the console object.

In Node.js all I/O performing operations like HTTP requests, file access etc. are designed to be non-blocking. The functions for these operations usually take a callback function argument as last parameter, which will be called once the operation is finished. The asynchronous nature of these operations often requires special means of synchronization, as exemplified in this post.

The program loops through the list of URLs and downloads one file after the other. Each subsequent download is only started after the previous download has finished. No two downloads are active at the same time. Finally, the program prints a message indicating that all downloads are complete.

Now we want to embrace the asynchronous programming style of Node.js. We have a different function, downloadAsync, which is a non-blocking asynchronous function. The function uses the callback convention of Node.js to let the programmer handle the completion of the asynchronous operation:

The download operations are now started at the same time and finish in a different order, depending on how long it takes each file to download. The quickest download finishes first, the slowest last. The total time for all downloads to finish is probably shorter than before, because slower connections do not make faster connections wait for them to finish.

However, there is one problem with this code: the message “Downloads complete.” is shown before the downloads are actually completed, which is obviously not the intended behavior. The reason why this happens is because the control flow immediately continues after the forEach loop has started all the downloads.

The ‘async’ module

What we need to correct this behavior is a way to wait for all asynchronous download operations started by the loop to finish before we print the “Downloads complete” message.

The async module for JavaScript provides various synchronization mechanisms for exactly these kinds of situations. In our case we’re going to use async.each:

The async.each function is similar to JavaScript’s forEach function. However, the function called for each iteration has an additional callback parameter, which must be called when each iteration is considered to be completed. The third parameter to async.each is also a callback function. This function is called after all iterations reported their completion. This is where we place the output of the “Downloads complete” message.

Conclusion

The async module provides a rich toolset for the synchronization of asynchronous operations in JavaScript. Go check it out!

Name the input fields according to Rails conventions and use the $index variable from the “ng-repeat” directive to provide the correct index value. You also need a hidden input field for the id, if the item already has one:

On submit Rails will delete those elements of the has-many association with the “_destroy” attribute set to “1”. The other elements will be either updated (if they have an id attribute set) or created (if they have no id attribute set).